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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
#1 best tip for new shooters trying to get into the long range game!
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<blockquote data-quote="Daves762" data-source="post: 1751314" data-attributes="member: 33751"><p>The fundamentals of marksmanship. Form, breathing, trigger control, forward load the bipod, ect. All the wiz-bang calibers, and fancy gear can't compensate for poor fundamentals. Get rid of anything you will not be using on the hunt. Bench rests, sandbags, and stuff won't be there on the mountain, so don't train with it. My training is from prone, off a bipod, using exactly what I'll pack on a hunt, nothing more. Train like you fight, so to speak. That's just what works for me. Also you might consider this. Find a local veteran, one with expert metals. Buy him a case of the beverage of choice, stay humble, and soak up the knowledge. Friend of mine did just that a few years back, came out, and made a long range shot on a nice bull. One his first day ever hunting elk..... It can't hurt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Daves762, post: 1751314, member: 33751"] The fundamentals of marksmanship. Form, breathing, trigger control, forward load the bipod, ect. All the wiz-bang calibers, and fancy gear can't compensate for poor fundamentals. Get rid of anything you will not be using on the hunt. Bench rests, sandbags, and stuff won't be there on the mountain, so don't train with it. My training is from prone, off a bipod, using exactly what I'll pack on a hunt, nothing more. Train like you fight, so to speak. That's just what works for me. Also you might consider this. Find a local veteran, one with expert metals. Buy him a case of the beverage of choice, stay humble, and soak up the knowledge. Friend of mine did just that a few years back, came out, and made a long range shot on a nice bull. One his first day ever hunting elk..... It can't hurt. [/QUOTE]
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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
#1 best tip for new shooters trying to get into the long range game!
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